As we saw, Andy Goram wore a red Hampden shirt – at Hampden Park – when Scotland played Romania in October 1991. It was a fitting send-off, as it had been superseded as the primary Umbro goalkeeper design by then.

Sartorially, the 1991 FA Cup final is remembered for Tottenham Hotspur’s new kit and the return to baggy shorts. That meant that, even allowing for his penalty save from Gary Lineker, Mark Crossley’s shirt was somewhat overlooked.

In a more turquoisey shade of green, it featured a series of black triangles arranged into a v-shape, trimmed in a shade of dark red. Incidentally, Crossley wore padded white shorts which were different to those of his team-mates.

Come the autumn, it would be rolled out across most of Umbro’s contracts – Celtic, Everton and Tottenham were given bespoke styles.

Aston Villa

Chelsea

Ipswich Town

Leeds United

Manchester City

Newcastle United

Oldham Athletic

Sheffield United

Sheffield Wednesday

In addition to the green, yellow and purple variations were commonly seen.

Pavel Srnicek tended to favour it at Newcastle (note how low the Newcastle Breweries star had to be) while it gained primacy at Nottingham Forest in the spring of 1992 – Crossley wore it in the Rumbelows Cup semi-final win over Tottenham Hotspur and, after he got injured, deputy Andy Marriott had it for that final loss to Manchester United and the ZDF Cup final win over Southampton.

There was also a purple variant. Kevin Hitchcock of Chelsea used it quite a bit – referees seemingly having no problem with its closeness to blue, and Erik Thorstvedt of Tottenham also had to call upon that option away to Sheffield Wednesday.

Spurs’ two goalkeeper shirts were yellow, which clashed with their own away kit, and blue, which obviously couldn’t be used against Wednesday.

We said three colours were seen on-pitch above, but there is a tantalising possibility that there was a fourth, blue, option.

The easiest explanation is that that’s a picture of a green shirt and it looks blue – but the doubt comes from the fact that the green had a white number. Unfortunately, we have no evidence of John Lukic wearing it.

STOP PRESS: Proof has come that the blue was worn, by Andy Rhodes of Dunfermline Athletic:

In contrast to the Hampden, which had a durable lifespan of three years or so, this successor (dubbed ‘Premier’ in an American Umbro catalogue, but we’re not sure if that was the ‘real’ name) was supplanted after just a season.

The same three base colours were used, albeit with slight shade differences, with chalkstripes instead of the triangles. However, a big change was that, with match officials in the new Premier League wearing green instead of black, yellow was the most popular goalkeeper shirt.

Aston Villa

Chelsea

Ipswich Town

Manchester City

Nottingham Forest

Oldham Athletic

Sheffield Wednesday

Sheffield United

You’ll notice that the crests were now housed in shields. Umbro had employed a retro design feel to their new outfield shirts, and each goalkeeper’s shirt was the exact same as the shield his team-mates had on their new shirts.

With clubs who had new homes – Villa, Ipswich, Forest and Sheffield United – the club colours matched quite well, while the new aways of Chelsea and Oldham used the same palette and so they matched too.

However, Man City’s new change kit was purple, while Sheffield Wednesday’s was yellow and black.

That looked fine when Chris Woods wore his own yellow shirt, but when Wednesday had to change he generally donned purple, while green was used in an early-season Coca-Cola Cup game (officials in the cups still wore black), before Wednesday secured Sanderson as sponsors.

Wednesday made it to the league cup final, where they played Arsenal. Both sides wore the same special inscription on their shirts, and, instead of the shield crest, Woods had exactly the same Umbro logo and crest as the rest of the team – who also had the Sanderson wordmark in black, as on the away kit, rather than usual red.

In the new Division 1 of the Football League, Derby County and Newcastle United also had green as the officials there were still in black too. Peter Shilton had left Derby by this time – whereas he had no problem wearing Umbro for England, with the Rams he generally wore an Uhlsport 544 shirt.

The previous design still retained some use, though. When Spurs went to Sheffield Wednesday early in the season, Ian Walker wore green this time rather than purple. Incidentally, it featured the updated Umbro logo with capped wordmark.

That was in September, but prior to that, there must have been a delay in the arrival of the new shirts at Wednesday’s neighbours Sheffield United.

On the opening day of the season, they hosted Manchester United and goalkeeper Simon Tracey wore a yellow 1991-92 shirt, with Football League sleeve patches and, oddest of all, some triangles missing.

Sheffield Wednesday also reached the FA Cup final, with Arsenal again the opponents.

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I have a retail version of the green ‘Premier’ with number 1 pre-printed. On my shirt the middle stripe isn’t centered.

There was also the all black jersey that Neville Southall used for Everton and Wales. I beleive that it was the same style as the ‘Premier’ and that Southall also had a version of it that was kind of a mix between green and grey.

Kevin Hitchcock and Dave Beasant wore both the turquoise and purple triangles shirts and later in the 91-92 season Beasant adopted the yellow version. The following season Hitchcock, Beasant and Dmitri Kharine all wore the yellow and purple striped shirts (although the purple triangles shirt was used at the start of the season). The green striped version was used in some reserve team games.